robdixon87, on 2012-August-08, 19:52, said:
What action do you now take? At the table, North bid 4♥ (which made) because 'my partner had not understood my 2♠ bid'. I tried to explain how that was a gross abuse of UI from partner's non-alert of 2♠, but didn't really have time to do so with lots of other rulings impending.
If you cannot get it across to him, perhaps a small PP is in order. The whole aim of PPs is to prevent recurrence of infractions.
robdixon87, on 2012-August-08, 20:15, said:
Do you mean a DP? I thought PPs were for violations of procedure e.g. a PP I gave on another board (which also had a contract adjustment attached to it) tonight was for 2NT-3♥ announced as 'transfer to ♠'?
As someone else explained, DPs are for bad behaviour. PPs are given rarely for gross misuse of UI.
Siegmund, on 2012-August-08, 22:53, said:
I am a lot more willing than the rest of you to take into account the fact that partner passed over 1C too. It depends on this pair's style, yes, but there are more than a few pairs for whom passing a strong a strong club NV all but guarantees a balanced hand. Anything else might have made a weak 1-suited or 2-suited bid. Virtually all of the hands where passing 2S is a reasonable action -- weakish hands with long spades and short hearts, or, conceivably, some spade-minor two-suiters assuming partner has the wrong minor -- are hands where many people would have acted before. You know partner has at most 13HCP so he can't have one of the big hands that passes first and backs in later.
At least for some pairs, there is simply no such thing as a hand which passes 1C initially but has enough spades to want to play 2S opposite an unsuitable hand.
I don't know if this is such a pair. If it is, however, I am a LOT closer to ruling Table Result Stands than to PPing anybody. If South is a very timid stodgy type and NS have no defence over strong club, well, then yes, there is either a use of UI factor in play or -- more likely in many "life novice" partnerships -- previous experience that partner often forgets certain conventions, which is really an MI thing.
Interesting. If partner cannot have long spades, then the player could bid 4
♣ and argue that, since 3
♠ cannot have long spades, it must show a club fit. But 4
♥ is Unauthorised Panic and certainly illegal.
pran, on 2012-August-12, 01:45, said:
The simple rule is:
You are supposed to carry out your entire auction as if you don't know whether or not partner alerted.
If you honestly do that then everything is in order.
SHRIEK !!!!!!
Law 73C makes it clear that if you have UI from partner this approach is unacceptable. Anytime partner makes an unexpected alert or failure to alert constraints are put on you.